To be in need of; require: "'Your hair wants cutting,' said the Hatter"(Lewis Carroll).
v.
intr.
To have need: wants for nothing.
To be destitute or needy.
To be disposed; wish: Call me daily if you want.
n.
The condition or quality of lacking something usual or necessary: stayed home for want of anything better to do.
Pressing need; destitution: lives in want.
Something desired: a person of few wants and needs.
A defect of character; a fault.
Phrasal Verb(s): want in Slang
To desire greatly to enter: The dog wants in.
To wish to join a project, business, or other undertaking.
want out Slang
To desire greatly to leave: The cat wants out.
To wish to leave a project, a business, or other undertaking.
[Middle English wanten, to be lacking, from Old Norse vanta; see euə- in Indo-European roots.] want'er n.
Usage Note: When want meaning "desire" is followed immediately by an infinitive construction, it does not take for:I want you to go (not want for you to go). When want and the infinitive are separated by a word or phrase, however, for is used: What I want is for you to go. I want very much for you to go.Want in its meaning of "have need, lack" normally takes for:They'll not want for anything now that they've inherited his estate. See Usage Note at wish.